JENNY BERKEL SIGNS WITH OUTSIDE MUSIC FOR NEW LP, SHARES FIRST SINGLE

Photo Credit : Rima Sater// DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

“I wrote the album in a tiny apartment, at a time when everything felt big and overwhelming,” says poet and songwriter Jenny Berkel about her new album, These Are the Sounds Left from Leaving, out May 13 on Outside Music. She was living in a brownstone walk-up full of radiant light and the ever-present soundscape of a leaky bath faucet. It was a sudden move at the time — a spontaneous departure from touring, bustling city life, being many things to many people — that landed Jenny in a space of self-imposed stillness.

“The songs themselves are a study of proximity, bringing big fears into small spaces,” says Jenny, reflecting on the album. “They’re intimate examinations of a world that often overwhelms.” Each song is set in the micro-world of a keen feeling observer, trying to parse a mindful moment in a setting where it feels impossible to drop a truth anchor—a post-Trump, heavily gaslit world where perceptions of reality remain distorted.

The album sees Jenny taking on a producer's role, co-producing alongside Dan Edmonds and Ryan Boldt (The Deep Dark Woods) with string arrangements by Colin Nealis (Andy Shauf). The album’s first single, “You Think You’re Like The Rain”, also sees contributions from the critically acclaimed folk duo Clayton Linthicum and Kacy Anderson (Kacy & Clayton).

“You Think You’re Like the Rain,” is a song for the lonely and overwhelmed. Written in her tiny London, ON apartment, when she moved in “it was the very end of a rainy and grey December,” says Jenny. “The bathtub had a terrible leak that was an ever-present soundscape. The bright vibraphone (Dan Edmonds) and guitar (Clayton Linthicum) contrast the textures created by the synth and Kacy Anderson’s voice. Together, they create a soundscape that matches the lyrical examination of sadness and hope."

WATCH / SHARE “YOU THINK YOU’RE LIKE THE RAIN” HERE

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MORE ABOUT THESE ARE THE SOUNDS LEFT FROM LEAVING
“Kaleidoscope”
, is a dissonant and poetic consideration of the importance of care and precision in language, both in the broader political landscape and in intimate emotional ways. From the heart-wrenching confusion of interpersonal manipulation, it extrapolates a collectively felt disorientation at the kaleidoscopic swirling of disinformation and misinformation. “Lavender City” is a more intimate look at lies. A breakup song with crescendo-ing strings, insistent percussion, and hopeful harmonies, it’s about gaining the capacity to see clearly again – but with the painful entailment of anatomizing the lies that drew you in. Looking beneath them to see what’s inside.

Songs like “July” and “Just Like A River” embody a similar dichotomy but feel more like mellow meditations; they are recreations of moments where small, specific reveries gave way to more sprawling contemplation–but in an appreciably peaceful and illuminative way. “July started as a tiny chorus written for somebody I thought I could maybe love someday,” Jenny says with a smile, in a conversation about the seeds of the album’s singles. “It was a hot summer, one that reminded me of being a small child in the middle of July in southwestern Ontario. It’s a love song, but it’s also a nostalgic song that expresses how memory shifts and shapes you, and how the stories we tell become who we are.” 

“I wanted the songs to feel like living creations that capture a living moment,” says Jenny about envisioning the recording process. “I wanted that theme of big fears in small spaces to be heard and felt as a coexistence of intimacy and menacing permeability.” Recorded live off the floor at the Sugar Shack with engineer Simon Larochette, the album sparkles with its intended intricacies. Musically, it feels both close and expansive. Each song unfolds like a widening web of poetic associations, narrated by nostalgic piano, pondering strings, glittering guitars—and Jenny’s hauntingly immersive vocals. At times, songs end with an unravelling, the music splintering apart into disintegration like a lingering open question. Warm and dark, soft with stabs of madness, These Are The Sounds Left From Leaving is a cohesive collection of spare songs that bloom lushly with detail. 

Whether you’re reading Jenny’s poetry—in her debut chapbook Grease Dogs with Baseline Press — or listening to her songs, you’ll experience her drawing layers of far-reaching concern into particular moments, like concentric waves rippling inward toward a lone cast stone. These Are The Sounds Left From Leaving showcases the perspective of a unique storytelling artist, with an evocative practice that hinges powerful narratives on the intricacies of a multifaceted musicality. A songwriter immersed in poetry, a poet immersed in music—her work in all its forms is an invitation into a world of relatable introspection, in which even absences can be sculpted into vividly memorable verse. 

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THESE ARE THE SOUNDS LEFT FROM LEAVING
01 Just Like A River
02 Kaleidoscope
03 Watch You Fade
04 July
05 Lavender City
06 Under A Sky
07 You Think You’re Like The Rain
08 Invisible You
09 Song Of Yourself
10 Here Comes The Morning

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YVES JARVIS SHARES CHAD VAN GAALEN ANIMATED VIDEO FOR NEW SINGLE

“Prism Through Which I Perceive” Video Still

Today, Yves Jarvis has shared a colourful, psychedelic video for the new track “Prism Through Which I Perceive”, animated by fellow Flemish Eye artist, Chad Van Gaalen. Jarvis calls the song a “mandatory prism sentence…I calibrate and blitz forthwith.” 

Van Gaalen says of the video, “Quantum spellcheck guides the pen through this rhythmical visual. 'Prism through which i perceive' a quote from a master chef, shrink wrapped in the wav file. Zoom in and zoom out but always zooming, always morphing. Evolution of endless thoughts and the language that is indeed creating reality as we know it. These shapes come from the song!!! It's me, CVG transposing the vibrations of YJ. Lucky to be able to put on this suit and walk for a bit.”

“Prism Through Which I Perceive” Single Art // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Last June, Jarvis and his partner Romy Lightman released their debut album, Banned, under the moniker Lightman Jarvis Ecstatic Band

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“This album is a loose manifesto in our shared vision for a way of being,” said Lightman. “It’s about our relationship and the dynamics in that. There’s an epic-ness to it and tension at times. We’ve been developing our collaborative process since spending our time together at the Tree Museum intermittently for the past two years. It’s like the ways particles collide. There’s an alchemical aspect to it with these base components slamming together.”

This spring Jarvis is going on a North American tour with Andy Shauf with stops in Montreal and Toronto in April. Full tour dates can be found below.

Photo Credit : Yves Jarvis  // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

TOUR DATES
2/17 – Sheffield, MA – Racebrook Lodge
2/18 – Woodstock, NY – Colony SOLD OUT
2/19 – Hamden, CT – Space Ballroom
2/20 – Charlottesville, VA – The Southern Café and Music Hall
2/23 – Asheville, NC – The Grey Eagle
2/24 – Birmingham, AL – Saturn
2/26 – Orlando, FL – The Social
3/1 – Houston, TX – The Heights Theater
3/3 – San Antonio, TX – Paper Tiger
3/4 – Fort Worth, TX – Tulips FTW
3/5 – Oklahoma City, OK – Beer City Music Hall
3/8 – Tucson, AZ – 191 Toole
3/9 – Solana Beach, CA – Belly Up Tavern
4/5 – Montreal, QC – Theatre Corona
4/6 – Toronto, ON - History


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HELENA DELAND SHARES NEW VIDEO / SINGLE FOR “SWIMMER”

WATCH / SHARE “SWIMMER” HERE
BUY / STREAM “SWIMMER” HERE

WORLD TOUR DATES WITH THE WEATHER STATION AND ANDY SHAUF BEGIN FEBRUARY 17

Photo Credit : Tess Roby // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Today, Montreal’s Helena Deland shares the intimate, heartfelt, chilling new single “Swimmer”. The song is dedicated to her mother who sadly passed away last year and comes accompanied by a video that Helena filmed and directed using footage taken while flying over the St. Lawrence River via helicopter.

WATCH / SHARE “SWIMMER” HERE
BUY / STREAM “SWIMMER” HERE

Helena shares: “A little while after finding out that my mother was sick and that our days together were numbered, I went through a fundamental change, faced as I was with the need to reconsider things I had taken for granted. Growing older with her was now an impossible scenario, but I was being offered a suspension, some time to understand and try to change patterns that had been detrimental to our relationship, and to love her how I wished for her to be loved. I feel that we are in a similar predicament with the world, faced with the climate crisis.

Some losses are too big to wrap our minds around. Here, I am on the beach, watching my mother swim, faced with the immensity of the ocean, of our fragility, riding the troughs of magical thinking and crests of acceptance.” 

‘How detailed and hopeful,
how exact
everything is in the light
on the rippling sand, 

at the edge of the turning tide —
its upheaval —
its stunning proposal —
its black, anonymous roar.’

-Mary Oliver, "Clamming", Dreamwork

“Swimmer” Single Artwork by Jack Bool // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES


The release of “Swimmer” follows the celebrated debut full-length, 2020’s Someone New (Luminelle) and comes just before Helena embarks on an extensive tour which begins next week and includes headlining dates in Los Angeles and New York City, along with dates supporting The Weather Station and Andy Shauf, the latter of which will continue on with an overseas run that will keep Helena on the road through May of 2022. 

2022 TOUR DATES // TICKETS HERE
2.17.2022 Los Angeles, CA @ Moroccan Lounge 
2.19.2022 Salt Lake City, UT @ The State Room *
2.21.2022 Denver, CO @ Globe Hall *
2.23.2022 Minneapolis,MN @ Turf Club *
2.24.2022 Madison, WI @ High Noon *
2.25.2022 Chicago, IL @ Lincoln Hall *
2.26.2022 Toronto, ON @ Longboat Hall 
3.01.2022 Quebec, QC @ Le Pantoum 
3.03.2022 Montreal, QC @ Le National 
3.05.2022 Brooklyn, NY @ Baby’s All Right
3.13.2022 San Francisco, CA @ Bimbo’s 365 Club ™
3.15.2022 Seattle, WA @ Neptune Theatre ™
3.16.2022 Portland, OR @ Aladdin Theater ™
3.25.2022 University City, MO @ Blueberry Hill Duck Room ™
3.26.2022 Louisville, KY @ Zanzabar ™
3.29.2022 Richmond, VA @ Richmond Music Hall ™
3.30.2022 Washington, DC @ Black Cat ™
3.31.2022 Philadelphia, PA @ Union transfer ™
4.18.2022 Düdingen, CH @ Bad Bonn ™
4.19.2022 Lyon, FR @ Epicerie Moderne ™
4.20.2022 Bordeaux, FR @ Krakatoa ™
4.21.2022 Paris, FR @ Le Trianon ™
4.22.2022 Rouen, FR @ Le 106 ™
4.23.2022 Luxembourg, LU @ Kulturfabrik ™
4.24.2022 Utrecht, NL @ TivoliVredenburg ™
4.25.2022 Rotterdam, NL @ Rotown ™
4.26.2022 Nijmegen, NL @ Doornroosje ™
4.28.2022 Copenhagen, DK @ Loppen ™
4.29.2022 Oslo, NO @ Ingensteds ™
4.30.2022 Stockholm, SE @ Nalen Klubb ™
5.02.2022 Hamburg, DE @ Knust ™
5.03.2022 Berlin, DE @ Silent Green ™
5.05.2022 Brussels, BE @ Les Nuits Botanique ™
5.06.2022 Cologne, DE @ Luxor ™
5.07.2022 Genk, BE @ Little Waves Festival ™
5.09.2022 Birmingham, UK @ Castle and Falcon ™
5.10.2022 Edinburgh, UK @ Summerhall ™
5.11.2022 Glasgow, UK @ Drygate ™
5.12.2022 Manchester, UK @ Gorilla ™ 
5.13.2022 Leeds, UK @ Brudenell Social ™ 
5.14.2022 Bristol, UK @ Fiddlers ™
5.15.2022 Brighton, UK @ Chalk ™
5.16.2022 London, UK @ Shepherds Bush Empire ™ 
5.18.2022 Belfast, UK @ Empire ™
5.19.2022 Dublin, IE @ Button Factory ™


* Supporting The Weather Station
™ Supporting Andy Shauf 




PRAISE FOR HELENA DELAND’S SOMEONE NEW

“...spare, introspective... The most striking tracks on the record show Deland trying to locate herself—physically and emotionally—in relation to others.” - American Songwriter

“"Straddling the line between spare guitar folk music and ethereal synth-pop, Helena Deland stands out from the crowded field of similar artists by crafting music that maintains an unsettling aura, like the sort of sounds you’d hear emanating from the Bang Bang Bar in Twin Peaks. She still has a way with catchy, hummable melodies, but on this evocative debut album, the Montreal-based musician applies her breathy, youthful voice to songs that are just as likely to keep you up at night as soundtrack your end-of-week masked trips to the liquor store."” - The A.V. Club

“Montreal singer-songwriter Helena Deland doesn't waste a note on her long-awaited project Someone New. You'll be hard-pressed to find a debut album released this year with such rich compositional acumen and creative instincts that orbit the domain of pop.” - The FADER

"The hopes, misgivings, wariness and vulnerability of a new romance all play out together in Helena Deland’s 'Comfort, Edge.' The first seconds of the song take their time coming into focus, with whispers and muffled, low-fi instruments. Then the tempo drags its feet, but the grungy guitar chords push forward; the harmonies climb, but Deland’s vocal maintains its cool, with hints of the melody from John Lennon’s 'Jealous Guy.' She sets out her requirements — 'You’ll never make a fool of me' is the first — but she doesn’t necessarily expect them to be met." - The New York Times

“What I love about this record is that it spends time in the sometimes embarrassing or less desirable or presentable places that we find ourselves in. She sings about sometimes shrinking herself down, or not treating people well, or letting other people not treat her so well. And it feels really refreshing to hear that perspective in these songs, backed up by this really kind of polished, clever, adventurous music...This is feminist work in the same way that the films of Chantal Akerman are feminist work... It's not ‘manifesto’ as you say, it's not punk rock ‘lift-our-voices-up-and-scream’ - it's subtle. And I just want to shout out one more thing about this record - the sequencing is incredible! I encourage people to listen to it as an album, because it really takes you on a journey...This is one of my favorite {albums} of the week!” - NPR - All Songs Considered

"Stunning, intricate debut album...Someone New shudders with a digital glow… Her songs are like islands: self-contained, gorgeous little worlds where nothing is obvious—especially the genesis of love and its unsteady first steps." - Pitchfork

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